Conspirator: Lenin in Exile the Making of a Revolutionary

Conspirator: Lenin in Exile the Making of a Revolutionary

by HelenRappaport (Author)

Synopsis

The father of Communist Russia, Vladimir Ilych Lenin now seems to have emerged fully formed in the turbulent wake ofWorldWar I and the Russian Revolution. But Lenin's character was in fact forged much earlier, over the course of years spent in exile, constantly on the move, and in disguise.

In Conspirator, Russian historian Helen Rappaport narrates the compelling story of Lenin's life and political activities in the years leading up to the revolution. As he scuttled between the glittering capital cities of Europe--from London and Munich to Vienna and Prague--Lenin found support among fellow emigres and revolutionaries in the underground movement. He came to lead a ring of conspirators, many of whom would give their lives in service to his schemes.

A riveting account of Lenin's little-known early life, Conspirator tracks in gripping detail the formation of one of the great revolutionaries of the twentieth century.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 416
Publisher: Basic Books
Published: 02 Feb 2010

ISBN 10: 0465013953
ISBN 13: 9780465013951

Media Reviews
Booklist
Rappaport delivers a vital restoration of the real Lenin.
Russian Life
The period of Lenin's life when he wandered Europe, impoverished and isolated, prior to the 1917 revolution is recounted in fascinating detail in this new book... This volume contributes immensely to our understanding of how Lenin forged his cadre, his leadership style and the worldview that all came to be so brutally reflected in the oppressive state he founded.
Kirkus
Remini revisits the Compromise of 1850 as an important, cautionary tale for today.... [He] skillfully presents the debates by the Great Triumvirate - Clay, John C. Calhoun and Daniel Webster - and decides that Clay's compromise ultimately saved the Union by allowing the North ten years to prepare for war and to nourish the great leader it needed - Abraham Lincoln. A fresh look at the value of compromise in advancing the general interest.
Seattle Times
[A]n excellent account of Lenin's formative years as a political exile from tsarist Russia that evokes the desperate scene of the European radical underground with nuance and in engaging detail.... Rappaport handles her subject with admirable objectivity, which makes the image of Lenin that emerges all the more damning.
Foreign Affairs
Never before have [Lenin's] mind, habits, quirks, and passions been so well portrayed as in this book.... The events of these years have been recounted a thousand times, but Rappaport penetrates beyond them by trailing after Lenin, his utterly devoted wife, Nadezhda Krupskaya, and the sundry young Russian revolutionaries who collected about him in an endless succession of one-room furnitureless apartments, makeshift meeting places, and furtive printing centers.
Richmond Times-Dispatch
Helen Rappaport, in Conspirator, vividly describes the years that Nikolai Lenin, one of the century's leading monsters, responsible for the reign of terror and the Gulag, spent in e
Booklist
Rappaport delivers a vital restoration of the real Lenin.
Russian Life
The period of Lenin's life when he wandered Europe, impoverished and isolated, prior to the 1917 revolution is recounted in fascinating detail in this new book... This volume contributes immensely to our understanding of how Lenin forged his cadre, his leadership style and the worldview that all came to be so brutally reflected in the oppressive state he founded.
Kirkus
Remini revisits the Compromise of 1850 as an important, cautionary tale for today.... [He] skillfully presents the debates by the Great Triumvirate - Clay, John C. Calhoun and Daniel Webster - and decides that Clay's compromise ultimately saved the Union by allowing the North ten years to prepare for war and to nourish the great leader it needed - Abraham Lincoln. A fresh look at the value of compromise in advancing the general interest.
Seattle Times
[A]n excellent account of Lenin's formative years as a political exile from tsarist Russia that evokes the desperate scene of the European radical underground with nuance and in engaging detail.... Rappaport handles her subject with admirable objectivity, which makes the image of Lenin that emerges all the more damning.
Author Bio
Helen Rappaport is a specialist in Russian history, as well as fluent in Russian. In 2002, she was Russian consultant to the National Theater's Tom Stoppard trilogy, The Coast of Utopia. She has translated all seven of Chekhov's plays and is most recently the author of The Last Days of the Romanovs. She lives in Oxford, England.